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MotoGP Barcelona GP: Martin crowned champion as Bagnaia wins finale

Pramac rider Jorge Martin clinched his maiden MotoGP title with a safe third-place finish in the Barcelona Grand Prix, while Francesco Bagnaia had to concede defeat despite scoring an 11th win of 2024.

Martin arrived at Sunday's finale in Spain with a 19-point lead in the championship over factory Ducati rival Bagnaia and only needed to finish inside the top nine to lift the trophy.

Although Bagnaia led away from pole position and controlled the race at the front, Martin was able to settle back in third position and still take the title by 10 points.

He became the first rider to be crowned champion on a satellite bike in the MotoGP era, with Bagnaia’s mentor Valentino Rossi being the last rider to achieve that feat during the final 500cc season in 2001.

When the 24-lap got underway at Barcelona, Bagnaia made the perfect start to lead into Turn 1, with Martin jumping from fourth to grab second position behind his title rival.

Gresini’s Marquez slotted into third position and immediately started piling pressure on Martin, who began to fall behind leader Bagnaia.

At the start of lap 2, Marquez pulled off a clean move on Martin into Turn 1, with the latter appearing content to drop to third position - knowing it would be more than enough to seal the title.

Francesco Bagnaia, Ducati Team (Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images)

Marquez, involved in his own scrap with Enea Bastianini for third place in the standings, then set about chasing Bagnaia, who had pulled out a small lead by then.

But the Spaniard didn’t attempt a move for the lead in the first half of the race, even when the factory Ducati rider made a small error at Turn 5 on lap 10.

Bagnaia continued to control the pace until lap 15 of 24, when he posted a stunning lap to pull half a second clear of Marquez.

The six-time champion managed to close the gap again as the race drew to a close, but Bagnaia did enough to hang on to the win.

Martin didn’t bother chasing the leading duo for victory, cruising more than two seconds behind them to take third and claim his world championship in any class since 2018 with a podium.

Aprilia’s Aleix Espargaro acted as the perfect rear-gunner for his ally Martin and looked set to take fourth place until Alex Marquez on the other Gresini bike snatched fourth position away from him on the penultimate lap.

That meant Espargaro capped off an incredible career in which he turned Aprilia into a race-winning force with a fifth-place finish on his home turf.

Aleix Espargaro, Aprilia Racing (Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images)

Factory Ducati rider Bastianini was also battling with Espargaro and the younger Marquez, but a mistake at Turn 2 on lap 8 forced him to take the escape road, leaving him seventh at the finish.

It meant that Marc Marquez won his duel with Bastianini for third place in the championship, as he prepares to take the latter’s place at the factory Ducati team in 2025.

KTM’s charge in Barcelona was led by factory rider Brad Binder, who completed another impressive from 18th on the grid to claim sixth, overtaking Bastianini on the final lap.

Binder also benefited from stablemate Pedro Acosta having a tough day in Barcelona, the 20-year-old rookie suffering a late drop in grip on his GasGas-branded RC16.

Acosta eventually finished 10th, behind Pramac’s Franco Morbidelli and VR46 rider Marco Bezzecchi.

Fabio Quartararo finished a solid 11th for Yamaha, leading future team-mates Miguel Oliveira (Trackhouse Aprilia) and Jack Miller (KTM).

Although Honda had shown strong pace in practice in the run-up to the weekend, only one of its riders finished inside the points, as Johann Zarco took 14th on the LCR bike ahead of Aprilia's Maverick Vinales.

Factory HRC rider Joan Mir was the only retiree from the race, as 22 of the 23 riders took the chequered flag.

Solidarity GP result

   
1
 - 
5
   
   
1
 - 
2
   
Cla Rider # Bike Laps Time Interval km/h Retirement Points
1 Italy F. Bagnaia Ducati Team 1 Ducati 24

-

      25
2 Spain M. Marquez Gresini Racing 93 Ducati 24

+1.474

1.474

1.474     20
3 Spain J. Martin Pramac Racing 89 Ducati 24

+3.810

3.810

2.336     16
4 Spain A. Marquez Gresini Racing 73 Ducati 24

+5.322

5.322

1.512     13
5 Spain A. Espargaro Aprilia Racing Team 41 Aprilia 24

+5.753

5.753

0.431     11
6 South Africa B. Binder Red Bull KTM Factory Racing 33 KTM 24

+7.081

7.081

1.328     10
7 Italy E. Bastianini Ducati Team 23 Ducati 24

+7.393

7.393

0.312     9
8 Italy F. Morbidelli Pramac Racing 21 Ducati 24

+8.709

8.709

1.316     8
9 Italy M. Bezzecchi Team VR46 72 Ducati 24

+10.484

10.484

1.775     7
10 Spain P. Acosta Tech 3 31 KTM 24

+10.618

10.618

0.134     6
11 France F. Quartararo Yamaha Factory Racing 20 Yamaha 24

+10.756

10.756

0.138     5
12 Portugal M. Oliveira Trackhouse Racing Team 88 Aprilia 24

+13.464

13.464

2.708     4
13 Australia J. Miller Red Bull KTM Factory Racing 43 KTM 24

+14.560

14.560

1.096     3
14 France J. Zarco Team LCR 5 Honda 24

+19.469

19.469

4.909     2
15 Spain M. Viñales Aprilia Racing Team 12 Aprilia 24

+22.195

22.195

2.726     1
16 Italy L. Marini Repsol Honda Team 10 Honda 24

+23.890

23.890

1.695      
17 Japan T. Nakagami Team LCR 30 Honda 24

+23.960

23.960

0.070      
18 Spain R. Fernández Trackhouse Racing Team 25 Aprilia 24

+29.001

29.001

5.041      
19 Spain A. Fernandez Tech 3 37 KTM 24

+29.145

29.145

0.144      
20 Italy M. Pirro Team VR46 51 Ducati 24

+37.295

37.295

8.150      
21 Spain A. Rins Yamaha Factory Racing 42 Yamaha 24

+39.138

39.138

1.843      
22 Germany S. Bradl HRC Test Team 6 Honda 24

+47.654

47.654

8.516      
dnf Spain J. Mir Repsol Honda Team 36 Honda 6

18 laps

    Accident  
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